The Pixel 9a comes in ₹3,000 cheaper than the Pixel 8a, but the savings bring a mix of upgrades and trade-offs. You get a faster Tensor G4 chip, though the phone still heats up during extended camera use. The main camera now has fewer megapixels, but better aperture helps capture bright, detailed shots—even foggy ones. Battery life is solid, lasting a full day with ease. The display gets slightly bigger, but thick bezels remain. On the plus side, the panel quality and stereo speakers are great for media. The real win here is the software—clean, smooth, and packed with helpful AI tools found on pricier Pixel models. If you value a polished everyday experience over raw power, the Pixel 9a fits the bill. Otherwise, consider the OnePlus 13R, Xiaomi 14 CIVI, or Realme GT 6 for more performance.
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What exactly makes the Nothing Phone (3a) Pro "Pro"? Not much—same display, chipset, battery, charging, and software as the Nothing Phone (3a). The only real upgrades? A periscope camera and a slightly better selfie shooter. Nothing’s just following the industry playbook—add a lens, slap on a "Pro" tag. The lineup is starting to feel messy, with the (3a) Pro making the (2a) Plus seem… well, unnecessary. Design-wise, it’s stunning, but the added weight might not be for everyone. Performance is great for daily use, but gamers should look at the OnePlus Nord 4, Realme GT 6T, or Realme P3 Pro. The camera is a mixed bag—some shots are fantastic, others feel like the software got confused mid-processing. A future update might fix that. If you’re new to Nothing, this is a solid pick. But if you’ve got the (2a) or (2a) Plus, this shouldn't be the ideal upgrade.
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